March 31st, 2011
I got a chance to sit down and talk to Java Champion Antonio Goncalves about the past, present, and future of Java EE. I’ve been working for the last six months in a heavy EE/SOA stack, and it’s been interesting to see the advantages and disadvantages. I definitely come from the other side of the world where specifications aren’t seen as an inherent sign of quality, and frameworks not sanctioned by Sun/Oracle are not to be feared. It was fun to get his opinions about this stuff.
The full interview is on the JetBrains Zone at DZone. We’re both JetBrains Academy Members and we’re slowly interviewing each other.
P.S. This is the first post I’ve ever made that mentioned Java Enterprise Edition. I suspect the next time EE is mentioned will be in another few years
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Interview, Java |
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Posted by Hamlet
August 8th, 2008
I stumbled across this report discussing Web 2.0 within an enterprise context, which I would like to recommend:
“Web 2.0 Gets Down to Business”.
The report discusses the results of an Information Week survey and presents some interesting charts and numbers, e.g. why companies introduced RIAs , or what type of apps are in the pipeline.
(…) rich apps are the wave of the future as Web users, customers, and employees demand capabilities matching what they’ve experienced on cutting-edge sites. IT must respond, either by effectively outsourcing development or by delivering the goods itself.
(…)
But IT can get a lot of return from a more fluid user experience for employees, too. Many insurance companies create RIAs for their sales agents, using platforms such as Adobe Flex to create forms that make it easier to complete complex insurance applications and pass them in an industry-standard format to underwriting systems. Other companies use RIAs to deliver personalized management dashboards – the No. 1 choice when we asked what apps are in planning or development – as well as workflow and multimedia training tools.
Data visualization is another common RIA use that can transform the productivity and creativity level of managers and knowledge workers. A telecom company might use an RIA to support engineers by providing a visual view of complex network events and possible correlations to problems. Though RIAs generally are overkill for simple Web forms and information displays, they’re particularly well suited to support complex interactions with multiple inputs and pages, large data sets, and the multimedia content seen in geospatial data or complex medical records, for example.
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Rich Internet Applications |
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Posted by admin
May 2nd, 2008

We’re preparing to travel to San Francisco to attend this year’s JavaOne.
At our company booth (at number 429) we will be showing the brand new milestone 2 for the upcoming release of UltraLightClient.
Download and try it out!
Screencast tutorial: “Enterprise Web Applications in 5 Minutes”
Daniel Grob and I recorded a screencast to show what’s new in the upcoming release:
http://www.canoo.com/ulc/external/video.html
The screencast highlights a number of features that Daniel presented and discussed in this blog.
The video is a little over 7 mins but we believe you’ll be able to build a ULC app in 5 mins…
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JavaOne, Screencast, UltraLightClient |
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Posted by admin